a. “Some Books on Fundamentals.” Journal of Political Economy 31 (June 1923): 342-59. [Review article on Supply and Demand, by H.D. Henderson; The Economics of Welfare, by A.C. Pigou; Principles of the New Economics, by L.D. Edie; and Introduction to Economics (revised ed.), by A.S. Johnson.]

Traduction anglaise en 1956, "Statics and Dynamics: Some Queries regarding the Mechanical Analogy in Economics", On the History & Method of Economics, and Selected Essays: Vol. 1. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, pp179-201

a. “Relation of Utility Theory to Economic Method in the Work of William Stanley Jevons and Others.” In Methods in Social Science, edited by Stuart Rice, 59-69. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1931.

b. “Profit.” In Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences, vol. 12. New York: Macmillan, 1934.

c. “Risk.” In Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences, vol. 13. New York: Macmillan, 1934.

d. “Supply.” In Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences, vol. 14. New York: Macmillan, 1934.

e. “Taylor, Fred Manville.” In Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences, vol. 14. New York: Macmillan, 1934.

f. Review of The Nature and Significance of Economic Science, by Lionel Robbins. International Journal of Ethics 44 (April 1934): 358-61.

g. “The Nature of Economic Science in Some Recent Discussion.” American Economic Review, Vol 24, n°2, June, pp225-238. [Review article on Prolegomena to Relativity Economics: An Elementary Study in the Mechanics and Organics of an Expanding Economic Universe, by Ralph William Souter.]

h. “Social Science and the Political Trend”, University of Toronto Quarterly, 3 (July): 407-27. Reprinted in Freedom & Reform

a. The Place of Marginal Economics in a Collectivist System, American Economic Review, 26 (1), mars, pp255–266. Papers and proceedings of the Forty-Eighth Annual Meeting of the American Economic Association

b. The Quantity of Capital and the Rate of Interest I, Journal of Political Economy, Vol 44, August, pp433-463

c. The Quantity of Capital and the Rate of Interest II, Journal of Political Economy, Vol 44, October, pp612-642

d. “Pragmatism and Social Action”, International Journal of Ethics, 48 (January 1936): 229-36. Reprinted in Freedom & Reform. [Review article on Liberalism and Social Action, by John Dewey.]

a. “Unemployment: And Mr. Keynes's Revolution in Economic Theory.” Canadian Journal of Economics & Political Science 3 (February 1937): 100-23. [Review article on The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money, by J.M. Keynes.]

c. “Two Economists on Socialism.” Journal of Political Economy 46 (April 1938): 241-50. [Review article on Socialism versus Capitalism, by A.C. Pigou and The Economic System in a Socialist State, by R.L. Hall.]

b. “Some Notes on the Economic Interpretation of History.” In Studies in the History of Culture: The Disciplines of the Humanities, 217-31. Menasha, WI: George Banta Publishing, 1942. Reprinted in Freedom & Reform.

c. “The War and the Crisis of Individualism.” In Economic Problems of War and Its Aftermath, edited by Chester W. Wright, 141-65. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1942.

e. “Short Cuts to Justice and Happiness.” Ethics 57 (April): 199-205. [Review on The Liberal Tradition: A Study of the Social and Spiritual Conditions of Freedom, by William Aylott Orton.]

f. “Salvation by Science: The Gospel According to Professor Lundberg.” Journal of Political Economy 55 (December): 537-52. Reprinted in On the History & Method of Economics. [Review article on Can Science Save Us?, by George A. Lundberg.]

a. "The Role of Principles in Economics and Politics", American Economic Review, Vol 4, n°1, mars, pp1-29

Repris en 1956, In: On the History and Method of Economics. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, pp251-271

b. The Economic Organization, New York: A.M. Kelley

c. Economics and Ethics of the Wage Problem.” In The Impact of the Union: Eight Economic Theorists Evaluate the Labor Union Movement, edited by David McCord Wright, 80-110. New York: Harcourt Brace, 1951.

d. “Economics.” In Encyclopedia Britannica, 14th edition, vol. 7, 1951. Reprinted in On the History & Method of Economics.

1968, “The Economic Principles of the New Deal.” In The Thirties: A Reconsideration in the Light of the American Political Tradition, edited by Morton J. Frisch and Martin Diamond, 84-99. De Kalb: Northern Illinois University Press.

1973, “Economic History.” In Dictionary of the History of Ideas: Studies of Selected Pivotal Ideas, vol. 2.

1991, “The Case for Communism: From the Standpoint of an Ex-liberal.” In Research in the History of Economic Thought and Methodology, edited by Warren J. Samuels, archival supplement 2: 57-108. Conférence de 1939

J. P. Raines et C. R. Jung, Knight on Religion and Ethics as Agents of Social Change: An Essay to Commemorate the Centennial of Frank H. Knight's Birth, American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 45.4, October, pp429-439

W. S. Kern, The Lemon Principle, Democratic Politics, and Frank Knight's First Law of Talk, Public Choice, 59.1, pp83-87

W. S. Kern, Frank Knight on Preachers and Economic Policy: A 19th Century Liberal Anti-Religionist, He Thought Religion Should Support the Status Quo, American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 47.1, pp61-69

J. P. Raines et C. R. Jung, The Social Economics of Frank H. Knight, In: Perspectives on the history of economic thought, Volume 3: Classicals, Marxians and neo-classicals. Selected papers from the History of Economics Society Conference, pp157-167

C. Nopenney, Frank Knight and the Historical School, In: Peter Koslowski, dir., Methodology of the Social Sciences, Ethics and Economics in the Newer Historical School: From Max Weber and Rickert to Sombart and Rothacker, Berlin: Springer, pp319-339

A. J. Cohen, Frank Knight’s Position on Capital and Interest: Foundation of the Hayek/Knight/Kaldor Debate, In: Malcom Rutherford, dir., The Economic Mind in America: Essays in the History of American Economics (Perspectives on the History of Economic Thought), London: Routledge, pp145-163

Tilman, R., "Frank Knight: Ideological Catalyst in the Libertarian Revival." In Ideology and Utopia in the Social Philosophy of the Libertarian Economists, 1-19. Contributions in Economics and Economic History, Number 223. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. [libertarianism; social philosophy; economic methodology; social economics]

A. J. Cohen, The Hayek/Knight Capital Controversy: The Irrelevance of Roundaboutness, or Purging Processes in Time?, History of Political Economy, Vol. 35, n°3 (Fall), pp469-90

L. Fiorito, John Maurice Clark and Frank H. Knight on Marginal Productivity Theory: A Note with Some Unpublished Correspondence, Research in the History of Economic Thought and Methodology, 21-A, pp49-64

R. Marchionatti, On the Methodological Foundation of Modern Microeconomics: Frank Knight and the ‘Cost Controversy’ in the 1920s, History of Political Economy, Vol. 35, no. 1 (Spring), pp49-75

N. M. Mehta, Frank Knight and the Productivity of Capital: Another Piece of the Puzzle, Journal of the History of Economic Thought, Vol. 25, n°4, December, pp487-503

R. Marchionatti, On the Methodological Foundation of Modern Microeconomics: Frank Knight and the 'Cost Controversy' in the 1920s, History of Political Economy, 35 (1), pp49-75

Ross B. Emmett, "Discussion and the evolution of institutions in a liberal democracy : Frank Knight joins the debate", In: Andrew Farrant, dir., "Hayek, Mill and the Liberal Tradition", Routledge Studies in the History of Economics, London et New York: Routledge, pp57-77